Free Encrypted Email Service

Why Should I Use Encrypted Email

Estimates suggest that there are currently hundreds of
persons using the internet who can read your
confidential email messages when sent from an unprotected, non-encrypted email
client. Spy
agencies run by many national governments, including unfriendly ones, scan
everyone's email! Bad guys do it too.

You can prevent such snoopy eavesdroppers from reading
your email by encrypting it. This is done by transforming your plain text
message into hard-to-decode cipher text.

About Our Free Encrypted Email Service

The aim of our service is to
transmit your email text message in an encrypted form so that it cannot be parsed for
key words while enroute. What happens once it is stored on the receiver's
computer is up to them and the protective security measures they have enabled.

Your e-mail remains encrypted
from the time it is sent and until it is received and decrypted by the intended
recipient. The recipient automatically receives instructions for decrypting
messages. No unencrypted message is transmitted across the internet.

Between transmissions when your e-mail is stored on mail servers, the
message remains encrypted and the content cannot be "sniffed" for specific
key words as is the manner in which email "eavesdroppers" select the
emails they want to read.

Using our encrypted email service there is no need to exchange passwords or complex public key details with
encrypted email
recipients. The encrypted email recipients are automatically sent instructions for deciphering the
encrypted email. Sending an encrypted email message using our service is as
simple as sending an ordinary Web-Mail. Other email encryption methods require the
sender and receiver to exchange public keys which is complicated, inconvenient
and not very practical when sending encoded email messages in a spontaneous fashion.

Encrypted Email at mobrien.com

Once you have obtained a Temporary
Password and clicked the button below, an email panel such as that
illustrated above will open.

"To:" - Enter the recipient's email address and check it
to be certain there is no typing error.

"Your Name" - This the name that will appear in the
"From" section of the receiver's email client.

"Your email" - Enter your email address and check
it to be certain there is no typing error.

"Subject" - Enter the subject of your encrypted email.

"Comments" - Enter your email message in the text area
provided. Check it fully before you change to an encrypted email.

Press the Encrypt button at the bottom of the panel to encrypt the
email message.

Press "Send" at the top left of the panel.

More About Encrypted Email

You come to work or school one day to find that an FBI special agent has
just paid a visit and that the system administrator has shut down your
computer account to comply with a subpoena for all of your email and other
computer files. One of "your" non-encrypted email files contains a large
collection of credit card information or a "Nigerian Fraud Email"
or a variety of scam projects or even all of these. Junk Mail? You did not
create those non-encrypted email files and know nothing about it.

You have been using hard-to-guess passwords and changing them regularly.
How could someone have gotten access to your computer to use it for this scurrilous
activity? How would the FBI or other agency find it? One likely possibility
is that as well as being a recipient of a ton of spam or junk email, you
have been a victim of an email packet sniffer attack.

The information you transmit via email is essentially being sent back and
forth along a wire. Anyone along that wire has the access enough to
intercept and read the text. It's fairly easy to do. You might think that
there would be an awful large amount of text information to scan. That's
true, but the people doing the packet sniffing are looking for very specific
key words. They program their "sniffing" software to perform
certain actions and both store and flag messages containing certain key
words.

That's where encrypted email comes in. The words in your encrypted email are gibberish
to such packet sniffers and the email passes unread by the eavesdropper. As your
encrypted email travels to the destination mail server via as many as 30 hops
from computer to computer, the various packet sniffers that intercept the
encrypted email will only read sense from the to and from addresses. The
encrypted email's message portion will pass by the eavesdropper unnoticed.